UTSA women leave for Birmingham, feeling confident

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA women’s basketball team left town on a damp and foggy Monday morning, headed for the American Conference tournament in Birmingham, Ala.

Cheyenne Rowe. UTSA women's basketball beat Texas State 64-41 on Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA forward Cheyenne Rowe expressed pride in her teammates for their resilience in battling through a season marked by ‘hardships.’ – File photo by Joe Alexander

Coming off a regular-season ending upset victory over the conference champion Rice Owls, players said they feel confident that they can do some damage as the No. 6 seed.

“I’m definitely very proud of us, because we’ve been through a lot of hardships,” UTSA senior Cheyenne Rowe said. “We’ve bounced back a couple of times, and we bounced back against Rice, and that was really amazing.”

The tournament starts with the first-round games Tuesday at Legacy Arena in Birmingham, but with a bye, the Roadrunners (14-15, 9-9) open play on Wednesday afternoon.

They’ll take on either the seventh-seeded Temple Owls or the No. 10 Tulane Green Wave.

“I’m feeling confident,” senior guard Ereauna Hardaway said. “Last game was a great win for us. It’s always a good feeling going into the tournament with a win. I just think we’re feeling confident going in.”

About an hour after the UTSA bus left campus, the American released its postseason all-conference teams and individual award winners.

Rowe, a 6-2 forward from Ontario, Canada, emerged as the only UTSA player recognized. She was named to the all defensive team and also to the all conference second team.

In the Roadrunners’ last game, it looked as if they had several players whose names could have appeared on the American’s release of honorees.

Multiple UTSA players contributed in a 61-52 victory as Rice had a 22-game winning streak snapped and were handed their only loss in 18 conference games this season.

In the first half, the ball moved and UTSA’s sometimes sputtering offense hummed. The Roadrunners shot 59 percent from the field. They rang up a 41-21 lead.

“We got the freedom to shoot, so everyone was confident in their shot,” Rowe said, “and everyone shot it. We talked about rebounding. Getting the right shot. Moving the ball.

“So, when we get the right shot, we can rebound in the right positions, and when we get the chance to rebound, we get second-chance opportunities.

“So it was just amazing to see everyone shooting and everyone getting the rebounds. It was great.”

Hardaway credited freshman Adriana Robles for getting everyone involved.

“We were all just playing with confidence,” she said. “It’s always good when you see shots fall, too. It gives you a good rhythm to the game. A good flow.

“Adriana did a great job of getting everyone involved. Everybody was scoring the ball, and we were playing together.”

American Conference
Women’s basketball tournament
At Birmingham, Ala.

Tuesday

Game 1 — (8) Charlotte vs. (9) FAU, noon
Game 2 — (7) Temple vs. (10) Tulane, 2 p.m.

Wednesday

Game 3 — Game 1 winner vs. (5) North Texas, noon
Game 4 — Game 2 winner vs. (6) UTSA, 2 p.m.

Thursday

Game 5 — Game 3 winner vs. (4) Tulsa, noon
Game 6 — Game 4 winner vs. (3) South Florida, 2 p.m.

Friday

Game 7 — Game 5 winner vs. (1) Rice, 6 p.m.
Game 8 — Game 6 winner vs. (2) East Carolina, 8 p.m.

Saturday

Game 9 (championship) — Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 winner, 8:30 p.m.

Records

(1) Rice 27-4, 17-1
(2) East Carolina 22-9, 14-4
(3) South Florida 20-11, 13-5
(4) Tulsa 19-11, 11-7
(5) North Texas 17-13, 11-7
(6) UTSA 14-15, 9-9
(7) Temple 14-16, 8-10
(8) Charlotte 14-17, 8-10
(9) FAU 13-17, 7-11
(10) Tulane 11-19, 6-12

Basketball: UTSA men finish 5-25 after falling in the season finale at Rice

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

UTSA’s season is over.

It’s also over for the Rice Owls, who built an 18-point lead in the first eight minutes of the game and then held on at the end for an 80-71 victory over the Roadrunners in an American Conference men’s basketball finale Sunday in Houston.

Both teams finished in the bottom three in the 13-team conference and thus will not play in the postseason tournament, which opens Wednesday in Birmingham.

Freshman Matheo Coffi emerged as a bright spot against the Owls with 12 points and 14 rebounds as the Roadrunners finished 5-25 overall and in last place in the American at 1-17.

“He’s really played great down the stretch,” second-year UTSA coach Austin Claunch said on team’s radio broadcast. “Obviously we’re really excited about him as a freshman.

“He’s got a chance to be a good player in this league.”

Junior guard Brent Moss also enjoyed a solid game with 16 points and 10 rebounds. Forward Baboucarr Njie scored 16 and guard Jamir Simpson 11.

Because of injuries, UTSA played only seven players against the Owls.

For the Owls, Jalen Smith scored 25 points and Nick Anderson 20. The two guards combined to hit 11 of the team’s 12 three-pointers, with Anderson making six.

Rice’s hot-shooting start proved to be the difference in the game.

“You can’t give ’em an 18-point lead in the first half, right,” Claunch said. “You get it back to whatever it was, nine or 10, but it’s just hard, playing a team on the road. They played great.

“They played well (on) Senior Day. You expect them to come out and play well. Their guards played with great poise and purpose. I’m proud of how we fought back. But now we’ve got a lot of work to do.”

Despite a 17-game losing streak and 22 losses in 23 games to close the season, Claunch said he is proud of his team.

“It’s bigger than basketball,” the coach said. “I’ve coached some of these guys for the last time. These guys are always part of my family, part of our family.

“I got to look back and figure out why we didn’t have the year we wanted to have on the court. But it’s still a special group of young men.

“They’re going to do a lot of good things past this, and I’m proud of ’em.”

The UTSA men had trouble from the beginning fielding a healthy, cohesive lineup.

By the time conference play started, the adversity had reached crisis proportions.

Claunch said the plague of injuries was the worst he has endured in seven seasons as a head coach, including five at Nicholls State and two at UTSA.

Injuries decimated UTSA’s frontcourt, knocking out, at various times, Duke transfer and 7-foot center Stanley Borden, 6-11 forward Mo Njie and 6-7 forward Macaleab Rich.

Borden played in only three games and Rich in 11, while neither made an appearance in an American Conference game.

Arizona State transfer Austin Nunez, meanwhile, made it to Feb. 7 before a hard fall under the basket in a home game against North Texas ended his season.

Nunez, averaging 9.8 points, played only 22 games.

Perhaps most disappointing of all, TCU transfer Vasean Allette never played at all for personal reasons.

Combined with a midseason shoulder injury to freshman guard Dorian Hayes, the adversity proved to be too much to overcome, and the Roadrunners played with anywhere from six to eight healthy players for most of the last two months.

Looking ahead to next year, the Roadrunners hope to build around this season’s young core of sophomore Baboucarr Njie, plus freshman Dorian Hayes, Kaidon Rayfield and Coffi.

Nunez and Moss, both juniors, also have eligibility remaining.

Records

UTSA 5-25, 1-17
Rice 13-18, 7-11

Notable

The Roadrunners’ win-loss record in conference play (1-17) is the worst in program history.

Their 5-25 overall record matches the program record for fewest wins in a season and ranks second in most losses.

In 2015-16, Brooks Thompson’s last team at UTSA finished 5-27 and 3-15 in Conference USA.

Baseball: New Mexico State snaps UTSA’s six-game winning streak

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Left-handed reliever Connor Wylde worked out of a ninth-inning jam Sunday afternoon, and the New Mexico State Aggies won 5-4 to snap 25th-ranked UTSA’s six-game winning streak.

UTSA’s Diego Diaz led off the ninth with a single and moved up when Garrett Gruell reached on a hit by pitch.

On a sacrifice bunt by Jordan Ballin, Diaz and Gruell advanced 90 feet, putting runners at second and third.

With two outs, the Aggies walked Drew Detlefsen to load the bases. At that point, Wylde retired Lane Haworth on a ground ball to end the threat.

UTSA won the series, two games to one, after winning 10-2 Friday and 13-0 on Saturday.

On Sunday, the Aggies took a three-run lead, lost it after a three-run Roadrunners rally, and then scored again in the bottom of the eighth to take the lead.

Boston Vest led off with a single off UTSA relieve Sam Simmons. Vest was sacrificed to second and took third on a ground ball.

He scored on the next play when the batter, Dane Woodcock, bunted and reached base safely on Simmons’ throwing error.

UTSA took a 1-0 lead in the second when Caden Miller ripped a solo home run to right.

New Mexico State responded with four straight runs, including one in the third, two in the fourth and another in the fifth, for a 4-1 advantage.

The Roadrunners came alive in the sixth with three runs on four hits to tie the game.

Detlefsen led off with his sixth home run of the season. Miller added an RBI single and Diego Diaz a run-scoring double.

Records

UTSA 13-2
New Mexico State 7-8

Coming up

UTSA at Texas Tech, Tuesday
UTSA at Texas Tech, Wednesday

Pat Hallmark wins his 200th game at UTSA in a 13-0 rout over New Mexico State

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Coach Pat Hallmark reached a milestone with his 200th win at UTSA as the 25th-ranked Roadrunners scored in double figures for the 10th time in 14 games with a 13-0 run-rule victory over the New Mexico State Aggies Saturday night.

In the contest stopped after eight innings at Las Cruces, N.M., the Roadrunners (13-1) stroked 14 hits and homered twice to win their sixth straight, tying the 1994 team for the fastest start in program history.

New Mexico State (6-8) was baffled from the beginning by UTSA starter Conor Myles, who pitched 5 and 1/3 innings scoreless. Myles allowed only two hits and one walk while striking out eight.

As Myles cruised, UTSA bats supplied the thunder with both Andrew Stucky and Drew Detlefsen, returning players from last year’s NCAA Super Regional team, hitting home runs.

Stucky bashed a solo homer in the sixth and Detlefsen unloaded with a two-run shot in the seventh.

For Stucky, it was his fourth round-tripper of the season, temporarily tying him for the team lead until Detlefsen delivered his fifth an inning later.

Newcomer Lane Haworth, a transfer from Wichita State, also had a big night. He went four for six, scored three runs and produced two RBIs.

UTSA produced a big inning for the second straight night in Las Cruces. On Friday night, the Roadrunners scored four runs in the fourth en route to a 10-2 victory.

On Saturday, they jumped all over Aggies reliever Jack Turner for seven runs on seven hits in the fifth.

Christian Hallmark opened the inning with a double and scored on Detlefsen’s single up the middle.

Jordan Ballin capped the uprising with a two-run single, chasing Turner to the showers.

Once the dust settled, UTSA had sent 11 batters to the plate and had built a 9-0 lead on the home team.

Records

UTSA 13-1
New Mexico State 6-8

Coming up

UTSA at New Mexico State, Sunday, noon

Notable

Pat Hallmark improved his record at UTSA to 200-112 in a little more than six seasons. He is 265-160 for his career, which includes two seasons at the University of the Incarnate Word.

For Lane Haworth, it was his second four-hit performance of the season. He also had four in the third game of the season, a 13-1 victory over South Dakota State on Feb. 15.

Starting pitching for the Roadrunners is starting to round into form. On Friday night, Connor Kelley pitched six innings scoreless. On Saturday, it was Conor Myles, who shut out New Mexico State for five and 1/3.

The Aggies were last shut out at home on March 15, 2024, when they fell to Sam Houston 10-0 in eight innings.

UTSA women win, 61-52, snapping Rice’s 22-game winning streak

Update: With the American Conference women’s basketball tournament set to open Tuesday in Birmingham, Ala., the UTSA Roadrunners are seeded sixth, with a first-round bye. They will open play in Wednesday’s second round against either the No. 7 Temple Owls or the 10th-seeded Tulane Green Wave.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Crazy things in college basketball tend to happen in March, and so it came to be on a Saturday afternoon in Houston, as the UTSA women built a 25-point lead in the third quarter and then held on, 61-52, snapping the Rice Owls’ 22-game winning streak.

For those following Roadrunners women’s basketball lately, it was a surprising development. Stunning, really.

Earlier in the week, on Wednesday night in San Antonio, the Roadrunners walked off the floor at home with their heads down, having lost 52-41 to the Tulsa Golden Hurricane.

UTSA’s fourth setback in five games left open the troubling question of just how far the team had fallen since it won a school-record 26 games and the 2025 American Conference regular-season title.

In the second quarter against Tulsa, the Roadrunners’ offense bottomed out, scoring only one point, shooting zero for 10 from the field and turning it over seven times.

Their 41 points represented a low for the season in conference.

Taking the floor against Rice in Houston, however, players seemed to put all of the negative thoughts out of their minds and blasted out to a 41-21 intermission lead.

Coming out of halftime, they built their advantage to 48-23 when Mia Hammonds scored on a fast break with 6:43 remaining in the third quarter.

The Owls, who had clinched the American regular-season title on Feb. 25, made a run in the final minutes of the game but ultimately ran out of time against the suddenly rejuvenated Roadrunners.

How did they get it done?

“Honestly, trusting in our coaches, trusting in each other, playing real hard, and just going all out on every possession — loose balls, rebounds, all that,” UTSA forward Idara Udo told an ESPN reporter in the post game. “Just playing together.”

With an offense that averaged only 60 points and 38 percent shooting from the field, the Roadrunners were on pace to score in the 70s until they started to slow the ball down at the end to drain the clock.

They finished the game by hitting 51 percent afield and 55 percent from three (five for nine.) Though the Roadrunners’ 25 turnovers hurt them, the Owls failed to take maximum advantage, scoring only 16 points off the miscues.

“I thought we played our tails off,” UTSA coach Karen Aston said. “I mean, it wasn’t always beautiful, in particular the second half. It was … rough and tumble. They were doing everything they could to turn us over, and they did, a lot.

“But I just thought that we were resilient and we played hard. We played really hard today.”

Hammonds led UTSA in scoring with 14 points.

Inconsistent for much of her second season with the Roadrunners, the 6-foot-3 wing from Cibolo Steele High School showed poise and some finesse in hitting seven of 10 shots from the field.

Udo also played efficiently in making six of nine.

The 6-foot-1 junior from Plano finished with 12 points and nine rebounds. Cheyenne Rowe, UTSA’s leader, averaging nearly 14 points, scored only six but battled effectively in the paint for 12 rebounds.

Freshman guard Adriana Robles scored nine, with backcourt mates Ereauna Hardaway and Damara Allen finishing with eight apiece.

The Owls, playing on Senior Day, seemed out of sorts from the beginning. Especially on the defensive end, the Owls didn’t seem to adjust with the Roadrunners moving the ball and getting scoring from multiple sources.

On Jan. 31, the Owls came into San Antonio and emerged with a 65-55 victory, holding UTSA to 29.7 percent shooting.

At the same time, Rice point guard Victoria Flores erupted for 33 points on eight of 10 shooting. She also hit four of six from three and 13 of 14 at the line.

In the rematch, the Roadrunners limited Flores’ touches and held her to eight points. She finished three of 10 from the field and two of six from three.

Dominique Ennis, another one of the Owls’ standouts, had a rough day as well with six points on one for 12 shooting. She misfired on all seven attempts from long range.

Forward Aniyah Alexis led the Owls with 15 points. She was a six of 15 shooter. Flores and forward Shelby Hayes finished with eight points apiece.

San Antonio’s Hailey Adams, helped off the floor in the first half with an apparent leg injury, returned to action after intermission. The Clark High School graduate finished with four points and six rebounds.

Adams, an all-conference candidate, is averaging more than eight points and 10 rebounds per game.

Records

UTSA 14-15, 9-9
Rice 27-4, 17-1

Coming up

American Conference tournament, next Tuesday through Saturday, in Birmingham.

Tournament notes

UTSA will open the American’s postseason tournament in the second round on Wednesday as the No. 6 seed against either No. 7 Temple or 10th-seeded Tulane. The game will tip off at 2 p.m.

If the Roadrunners win on Wednesday, they would advance to Thursday’s quarterfinals, matched against the third-seeded South Florida Bulls. That game would also have a 2 p.m. start.

Rice, as the No. 1 seed, will get a triple bye and will open in the semifinals on Friday.

The American’s postseason champion gets an automatic bid into the NCAA tournament. The Roadrunners will need to win four games in four days to reach the NCAA’s 68-team event.

Rice game at a glance

The Roadrunners stunned the Owls in the first half, playing loose and free, shooting 59 percent and racing to a 41-21 lead.

UTSA’s point total matched what the team scored in the entire game Wednesday night in San Antonio, when they lost 53-41 to Tulsa.

Another oddity of the Roadrunners’ explosion in the first two quarters centered on Rowe, the team’s leading scorer. Limited to only eight minutes because of two early fouls, Rowe was scoreless.

As she sat and watched much of the half from the bench, Udo, Mia Hammonds and Allen all scored eight points apiece. Hardaway and Adriana Robles both scored seven.

UTSA women to close out regular season at Rice today

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

After losing four of their last five games, the UTSA women face an American Conference juggernaut today in Houston as a tune-up for postseason play next week.

The Roadrunners will play the conference’s regular-season champion Rice Owls at 2 p.m. at Tudor Fieldhouse. Rice has won 22 games in a row in a 27-3 season.

They have swept to victories in all 17 of their games in conference leading into the second match of the season against the Roadrunners, last year’s champs in the American.

The Roadrunners won the conference’s regular-season title last year at 17-1, but they have struggled lately just to maintain a level of consistency over four quarters.

On Wednesday night, UTSA barely broke the 40-point level, losing its home finale 53-41 to the Tulsa Golden Hurricane.

As a result, the Roadrunners will travel into Houston at 13-15 overall and 8-9 in the American.

The bracket for next week’s conference tournament in Birmingham is expected to be announced tonight. The American’s postseason showcase opens next Tuesday and runs through next Saturday.

From all indications, UTSA is locked into a No. 6 seed and thus will get a first-round bye, which means the Roadrunners are expected to open tournament play on Wednesday.

The Roadrunners will draw the winner of a first-round game between the seventh and tenth seeds. If they win, they’d play on Thursday against the No. 3 seed.

Records

UTSA 13-15, 8-9
Rice 27-3, 17-0

Coming up

UTSA at Rice, today, 2 p.m.

Notable

The Roadrunners and the Owls played on Jan. 31 in San Antonio. In that meeting, Rice led by three at halftime and then broke the game open in the third period on the way to a 65-55 victory.

Rice guard Victoria Flores scored 33 points on eight of 10 shooting from the field. Flores knocked down four of six from three and 13 of 14 from the free-throw line.

On the defensive end, the Owls held the Roadrunners to 29.7 percent shooting from the field. UTSA could hit only seven of 36 shots in the second half.

Rice was the more opportunistic team in the first meeting. For the game, the Owls scored 21 points off 15 Roadrunners turnovers. The Roadrunners scored 13 points off 20 turnovers for the Owls.

Kelley throws six scoreless as UTSA beats New Mexico State, 10-2, improving to 12-1

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Connor Kelley pitched six scoreless innings, and freshman Nathan Johnson hit the first home run of his college career Friday night as the 25th-ranked UTSA Roadrunners rolled past the New Mexico State Aggies, 10-2.

UTSA pitching had a shutout working in the bottom of the ninth inning when the stadium lights at New Mexico State went out.

After a delay, the Aggies scored their only two runs before UTSA reliever Christian Okerholm put a stop to the rally and secured the team’s fifth straight victory.

In his best outing of the season, Kelley allowed only two hits and walked three while striking out six in the first of a three-game series at Las Cruces, N.M.

After issuing a leadoff walk in the third, the 6-foot-5 righthander retired the last 12 hitters he faced. Kelley was on his game after a shaky start, throwing 88 pitches, including 49 for strikes.

Johnson hammered a solo home run to lead off the fourth inning and added a sacrifice fly in a two-run seventh for the 25th-ranked Roadrunners, who improved to 12-1 on the season.

Another UTSA freshman, Aidan Eshelman, made his mark with two hits and two RBI.

The Roadrunners will play the Aggies again Saturday and Sunday in Las Cruces before traveling for two more on the road Tuesday and Wednesday in Lubbock at Texas Tech.

UTSA scored first in the second inning, opening the rally with a walk and later delivering a one-out single by Garrett Gruell.

The Roadrunners scored twice on the next play, a ground ball by Blaine Bishop that evolved into a throwing error by New Mexico State shortstop Boston Vest.

In the fourth, UTSA broke away.

Johnson smashed a leadoff homer off New Mexico State starting pitcher Bradyn Barnes to make it 3-0. It was the first homer of the season for Johnson, a freshman from Katy Seven Lakes.

Jake Carvajal entered the game at that point to replace Barnes on the mound. The Roadrunners greeted him with three straight hits, the last one an RBI double by Diego Diaz.

After Eshelman and Drew Detlefsen delivered consecutive RBI sacrifice flies, UTSA had crossed four runs in the inning to build a 6-0 lead.

The Roadrunners added two runs in the seventh, one in the eighth and one more in the ninth for their ninth game with double figures in scoring.

Records

UTSA 12-1
New Mexico State 6-7

Coming up

UTSA at New Mexico State, Saturday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at New Mexico State, Sunday, noon

Notable

Coach Pat Hallmark can get his 200th victory at UTSA on Saturday in Las Cruces. Hallmark is now 199-112 as he begins his seventh season with the Roadrunners.

He is 265-160 in his ninth season as a Division I coach, including two at Incarnate Word.

Tulsa women down UTSA, earn double bye into American tournament

Cheyenne Rowe. UTSA women's basketball lost to Tulsa 53-41 in the Roadrunners' final home game of the season on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA leading scorer Cheyenne Rowe produced 10 points and was held to three of 13 shooting from the field. – Photo by Joe Alexander


By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The Tulsa Golden Hurricane held the UTSA women to 29 percent shooting from the field, while also forcing 22 turnovers, as they romped to a 53-41 victory Wednesday night at the Convocation Center.

With the win, the Golden Hurricane (19-10, 11-6) clinched the No. 4 seed and a double bye into the quarterfinals of the American Conference tournament.

Meanwhile, UTSA (13-15, 8-9) is currently holding onto the No. 6 seed, which would yield a single bye through to the tournament’s second round.

Karen Aston. UTSA women's basketball lost to Tulsa 53-41 in the Roadrunners' final home game of the season on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA coach Karen Aston’s team struggled offensively in the home finale, making only 13 field goals. The Roadrunners shot zero for 10 from the floor in a one-point second quarter. – Photo by Joe Alexander

The Roadrunners have one game left in the regular season. They play Saturday against the Rice Owls in Houston, and the Owls (27-3, 17-0) have already clinched the regular-season title.

The tournament will be held from March 10-14 in Birmingham, Ala.

For the Roadrunners, the final score against Tulsa was not what they wanted, especially in the last home game of the season.

“I wanted to say thanks to all the people that came out today,” UTSA coach Karen Aston said. “I thought it was a tremendous crowd. A lot of groups came out. A lot of student-athletes were here, supporting our team.

“You know, I’m disappointed that we didn’t play better for probably some first-time people that came to see us play,” she added. “I always feel like if someone comes to the gym to watch you play, then you try to give ’em a reason to come back.”

For Tulsa, the victory was meaningful on a number of fronts. First, the Hurricane gained a measure of payback against the Roadrunners, who beat them 66-47 on Feb. 7 in Tulsa.

Second, they also bounced back from a dispiriting loss Sunday in Houston in which the Owls recorded a 105-65 victory.

But, perhaps most importantly, the double bye in the tournament is valuable from the standpoint of rest and extra time to prepare.

Also, it means the Golden Hurricane will have a shorter route to the postseason title.

Tulsa coach Angie Nelp. UTSA women's basketball lost to Tulsa 53-41 in the Roadrunners' final home game of the season on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

After her team lost by 40 points at Rice on Sunday, Tulsa coach Angie Nelp said she was proud of her players for bouncing back against UTSA. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By opening in the quarterfinals, they can win the American and secure the NCAA tournament’s automatic bid with three wins in three days.

“Anytime you get a bye in a tournament, that always helps,” Tulsa coach Angie Nelp said. “We’ve got another game to play this Saturday (at home against East Carolina).

“It’s not going to be an easy game. So we’ve got to prepare well and compete. Having that double bye may give us an extra day’s rest (the following week).”

Against the Roadrunners, redshirt senior Hannah Reddick led the Golden Hurricane with 17 points and six rebounds. Junior guard Jade Clack had 11 points and forward Mady Cartwright 10.

San Antonio’s Alisha Peavy, a freshman guard, sparked the Golden Hurricane with four points and a team-leading eight rebounds.

For the Roadrunners, it was a struggle all night to get their power forwards into an offensive rhythm, as Cheyenne Rowe and Idara Udo combined to shoot only four of 21 from the floor.

Guard Ereauna Hardaway led the team with 11 points and five rebounds. Rowe had 10 points and nine boards. Udo, meanwhile, was held to six points and nine rebounds.

Records

Tulsa 19-10, 11-6
UTSA 13-15, 8-9

Coming up

UTSA at Rice, Saturday at 2 p.m.

Notable

Tulsa Alisha Peavy. UTSA women's basketball lost to Tulsa 53-41 in the Roadrunners' final home game of the season on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

San Antonio’s Alisha Peavy, a Tulsa freshman from Pieper High School, produced four points and a team-high eight rebounds. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Even if UTSA loses Saturday against Rice, its chances of holding onto the No. 6 seed and the first-round bye appear to be good.

Trailing UTSA in the standings are Florida Atlantic, Temple and Charlotte.

All have 7-10 records, raising the possibility of a tie for sixth place after the 18-game schedule is completed.

In that case, the Roadrunners would have an edge in that they are 1-0 against both Florida Atlantic and Charlotte and 2-0 against Temple.

First half

The Golden Hurricane held the Roadrunners to a single free throw and one point in the second quarter en route to taking a 19-13 lead at intermission.

UTSA’s offense went completely cold. Not only did the Roadrunners shoot zero for 10 from the field, they also turned it over seven times.

In the meantime, Tulsa forward Dora Toman hit two of her team’s three 3-point shots as the visitors stunned the home team, 11-1, in the period.

The Roadrunners stayed in the game with a strong defensive effort of their own. They held the Golden Hurricane to seven of 16 shooting for 26.9 percent in the half.

UTSA built a 12-8 lead after the first quarter. Ereauna Hardaway sank a three with 1.8 seconds remaining for the final points. The shot was also UTSA’s last field goal of the half.

In the half, the Roadrunners went five for 21 from the floor for 23 percent. They also committed 13 turnovers.

UTSA women, in their home finale, host Tulsa tonight

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA women hope to secure at least a sixth-place finish and a first-round bye in the American Conference basketball tournament when they host the Tulsa Golden Hurricane tonight at the Convocation Center.

In the last home game on the schedule and the second-to-last overall, the Roadrunners (13-14, 8-8) also hope to sweep the two-game series from the Golden Hurricane (18-10, 10-6).

UTSA will close out the schedule Saturday on the road against the Rice Owls, who have clinched the American’s regular-season championship.

The conference’s 10-team women’s tournament is set for March 10-14 in Birmingham, Ala. The top two teams earn a triple bye into the semifinals.

The third and fourth-place finishers will open in the quarterfinals.

Fifth and sixth-place teams get a single bye into the second round, which means UTSA likely is faced with winning four games in four days to win the title.

The Nos. 7 through 10 seeds all play on opening day.

Officials at UTSA say they believe the team may have already clinched a spot in the No. 6 slot. But the American hasn’t yet confirmed that is the case.

The Roadrunners downed the Golden Hurricane 66-47 in Oklahoma on Feb. 7.

Records

Tulsa 18-10, 10-6
UTSA 8-8, 13-14

Coming up

Tulsa at UTSA, tonight at 6:30
UTSA at Rice, Saturday at 2 p.m.

Notable

Tulsa guard Alisha Peavy is a freshman from San Antonio’s Pieper High School. Coming into the UTSA game, she was averaging 2.7 points and 3.3 rebounds.

Her father is Ben Peavy, who played in the 1990s for Charlie Boggess at Alamo Heights High School.

Also, her cousin is New Orleans Pelicans guard Micah Peavy. Micah Peavy played at Texas Tech, TCU and Georgetown.

No. 25 UTSA wins its fourth straight, 7-5, over Texas A&M-Corpus Christi

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The 25th-ranked UTSA Roadrunners won their fourth straight game and their first of the season on the road Tuesday night, edging the Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Islanders, 7-5.

Afterward, UTSA coach Pat Hallmark acknowledged that his team was not at its best.

“The defense was atrocious, but I did think we remained persistent,” he said. “You’re not going to play great all the time, and this is a tricky ballpark with the wind and the sun.”

UTSA made three errors leading to three unearned runs.

“I’m not making excuses at all,” Hallmark said. “We have to play better defense, but it’s like this here. I don’t care what their record is, and it’s good now, but this is always a hard place to win.

“We played poorly on defense, but we were mentally tough.”

Falling behind 3-0 after the first inning, the Roadrunners rallied with five straight runs to take the lead — scoring three in the fifth and two in the sixth.

For UTSA, Lane Haworth produced a fifth-inning, two-run double. In the sixth, Christian Hallmark added a two-run homer to make it 5-3.

Undeterred, A&M-Corpus Christi rallied in the seventh with two unearned runs to tie. UTSA, in response, came up with two more in the ninth to take the lead for good.

With two outs and two on base via walks, Diego Diaz smashed a ball to the right of second baseman Cade Sanchez, who misplayed it on the back hand, allowing Caden Miller to score from second base.

Jacob Silva followed with an RBI single up the middle that plated Lane Haworth from second.

On a throw to the plate that was far off line, Diaz tried to score from first but was out at the plate to end the inning.

Sam Simmons yielded a one-out single to Jackson Smith in the bottom of the ninth that brought the tying run to the plate.

In response, the right-handed reliever from Manvel struck out Cade Sanchez and Isaiah Afework to end the game.

Simmons (3-0) finished for the Roadrunners, working two and a third innings to earn the victory.

Islanders reliever Pierre-Luc Jacques (0-1) took the hard-luck loss after pitching the last two innings.

Jacques nearly had the Roadrunners shut down in the ninth.

The ground ball to Sanchez could have been the third out of a scoreless inning, but it seemed to take a bad hop, ticking off the fielder’s glove for a base hit that scored the go-ahead run.

The Islanders started strong, scoring three runs on two hits in the first.

Smith opened the rally with a one-out double to center, later taking third on a wild pitch. He scored when Miller, the UTSA first baseman, bobbled a ground ball.

With Sanchez on first base via the error, Afework delivered a two-run homer to center off UTSA starter Ryan Self, boosting the home team into a 3-0 advantage.

Records

Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 8-5
UTSA 11-1

Coming up

UTSA at New Mexico State, Friday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at New Mexico State, Saturday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at New Mexico State, Sunday, noon

Notable

The Roadrunners entered the game with the Islanders looking to keep the momentum going from last weekend, when they won three straight at the prestigious BRUCE BOLT College Classic.

With wins in Houston against Ohio State, ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina and Baylor, UTSA earned enough recognition to gain a No. 25 national ranking Monday from D1 Baseball.

On Tuesday, the Roadrunners attained another notable milestone, emerging at No. 5 nationally in the first installment of the NCAA’s ratings percentage index.

Given all the notoriety, Roadrunners coach Pat Hallmark wanted to avoid a letdown. In the end, UTSA didn’t play its best game — it made three errors — but it did come away with its first road win of the season.

UTSA’s only loss this season came a week ago on Tuesday, Feb. 24, at Texas State, 7-2.